Dillon v. Medical Center Hospital

648 N.E.2d 1375, 98 Ohio App. 3d 510, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 4590
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 1993
DocketNo. 1942.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 648 N.E.2d 1375 (Dillon v. Medical Center Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Medical Center Hospital, 648 N.E.2d 1375, 98 Ohio App. 3d 510, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 4590 (Ohio Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Peter B. Abele, Judge.

This is an appeal from a partial summary judgment entered by the Ross County Common Pleas Court, finding that Ova L. Dillon, Jr. (“appellant”) and Mary Elizabeth Dillon, appellants herein and plaintiffs below, had failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether the Medical Center Hospital (“hospital”), defendant below and appellee herein, is liable for the alleged negligence of its nurses for failing to take and record hourly circulation checks of Ova Dillon’s left foot.

Appellant assigns the following error:

“The lower court erred in granting Medical Center’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that there is not any genuine issue as to whether the negligence of the nurses proximately caused Ova L. Dillon, Jr.’s injuries.”

We glean the following facts from the parties’ briefs and the lower court’s judgment entry. 1 On January 22, 1988, appellant Ova L. Dillon, Jr. suffered injuries to his left leg when he fell from the back of a truck. Appellant went to the hospital’s emergency room for treatment. Doctors placed a cast on his leg and admitted him to the hospital.

On January 23, 1988, appellant developed circulation problems in his left foot. The circulation improved after Dr. Max Hickman ordered the cast pressure *512 reduced. During the next two days, appellant experienced more circulation problems. On January 24,1988 at 3:50 p.m., nurses notified Dr. George Boll that appellant’s circulation problems had worsened. Dr. Boll ordered the nurses to raise appellant’s leg four inches. The nurses complied, and appellant’s circulation improved.

On January 25, 1988 at 8:25 a.m., Dr. Boll examined appellant and wrote “toes are cool and getting number” on his progress notes. Twelve hours later, Dr. Boll removed the top of appellant’s cast. Although circulation initially appeared to be returning to appellant’s left foot, three hours later additional circulatory problems developed. Nurses contacted Dr. Hickman on January 26, 1988, at 2:00 a.m. about the problems. Dr. Hickman arrived at the hospital at 5:00 a.m. and determined that appellant suffered from compartment syndrome. At 5:30 a.m. Dr. Hickman performed a fasciotomy. Despite that surgery and more surgery performed a week later, compartment syndrome complications continued until other doctors amputated appellant’s leg on October 13, 1988.

On January 24, 1989, appellant filed a medical malpractice action against Dr. Hickman and the hospital. In an amended complaint filed on June 1, 1989, appellant added Dr. Boll to that action. On July 18, 1991, appellant voluntarily dismissed the hospital from the action without prejudice. On October 2, 1991, appellant, Dr. Hickman and Dr. Boll filed an agreed entry dismissing appellant’s claims against the physicians.

On September 3, 1991, appellant filed the instant action against the hospital, alleging “agents and employees” of the hospital “negligently cared for and treated” appellant. The hospital filed an answer noting that the physicians who treated appellant are not employees or agents of the hospital.

On August 18, 1992, the hospital filed a motion for summary judgment, noting that no one has ever alleged that its employees and agents conveyed insufficient information to the physicians, or otherwise caused them to commit malpractice. The hospital argued that Dr. Ian Blair Fries, appellant’s expert witness in the previous action, testified by deposition that medical negligence occurred when Dr. Boll and Dr. Hickman failed to perform the fasciotomy in a timely manner. According to Dr. Fries, rather, than ordering appellant’s leg to be raised four inches at 3:50 p.m. on January 24, 1988, Dr. Boll should have performed the surgery at that point. The sole criticism that Dr. Fries made of the nursing staff was that they failed to chart their hourly circulation checks of appellant’s leg.

In the motion for summary judgment, the hospital aptly noted that because appellant’s medical expert Dr. Michael Ruff testified that according to appellant’s medical records Dr. Boll should have performed the surgery at 3:50 p.m. on January 24, 1988, Dr. Ruff impliedly found the medical records to be adequate. In other words, Dr. Ruff impliedly found that the nurses’ failure to chart the *513 hourly circulation checks did not cause Dr. Boll’s failure to perform surgery at 3:50 p.m.

In response to the hospital’s motion for summary judgment, appellant argued that medical expert Dr. Dennis B. Brooks’s affidavit stated that the nurses’ failure to chart their circulatory checks proximately caused appellant’s injuries. Dr. Brooks stated as follows in his affidavit:

“(a) That the nurses at the Chillicothe Medical Center failed to exercise the standard of care in taking and recording hourly circulatory checks of the patient’s left foot;
“(b) In particular, on Sunday, January 24, 1988, from 7:55 a.m. through 3:50 p.m., only three circulation checks were performed during an approximately 8 hour shift;
“(c) That the circulatory embarrassment documented at 3:50 p.m. on Sunday, January 24, 1988, would most likely have been developing and showing clinical signs earlier that day which should have been discovered by a reasonably prudent circulatory check;
“(d) That had proper and more frequent circulatory checks been conducted and recorded earlier in the day on January 24, 1988, and had they been reported to the physician, a reasonably prudent surgeon would have altered the treatment provided this patient by coming to the hospital and making his own assessment;
“(e) In particular, a reasonably prudent physician should then have examined the patient himself, conducted his own circulatory check and passive stretch test of the foot, and taken off the top portion of the cast. If these tests had confirmed that the patient was developing compartment syndrome, and compartment pressure monitoring equipment was unavailable, a reasonably prudent surgeon should have performed an emergency fasciotomy on January 24, 1988 to relieve the developing compartment syndrome.” (Emphasis added.)

Appellant also noted that Dr. Fries, in his deposition, stated that if a fasciotomy had been done on or before January 24, 1988, at 3:50 a.m., then “in all likelihood the compartment syndrome could have been resolved.”

The hospital replied by noting that Dr. Brooks’s affidavit confirms that the a fasciotomy should have been performed at 3:50 p.m. on January 24, 1988 after the nurses notified Dr. Boll of appellant’s condition at that time. Once again, the hospital argues that Dr. Brooks, when preparing his affidavit, obviously found the nurses’ records to be sufficient to tell him appellant’s condition at 3:50 p.m. on January 24, 1988. The hospital notes that Dr. Boll, in his deposition, testified that not only did he fail to diagnose appellant’s compartment syndrome at that time, but he also failed to diagnose the syndrome a day later. Thus, the hospital argues, the nurses’ actions caused appellant no harm.

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Bluebook (online)
648 N.E.2d 1375, 98 Ohio App. 3d 510, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 4590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-medical-center-hospital-ohioctapp-1993.